![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/4321538d-9b92-49aa-8c9d-9ceb3b09d484.png)
![](https://fry.gs/pictrs/image/c6832070-8625-4688-b9e5-5d519541e092.png)
ARM is not paltry, it’s in small/portable devices because it’s efficient, not weak.
Aspiring polymath. Applied R&D @ Privacy and Scaling Explorations #maker #Ethereum🦇🔊🐼🐍🟨🦀 Trying to make the internet better. Opinions are my own and subject to change
ARM is not paltry, it’s in small/portable devices because it’s efficient, not weak.
Which can be missed by an examiner
Id swap the blades, it’ll probably be fine
Zero knowledge and multi-party computation, and technologies that allow, like TLS Notary and proof of email
So many people on Lemmy are pessimistic as shit, makes it hard to read the comments sometimes
I think they are doing this above board, so it’s just “contracts”. It’s not illegal, just shortsighted. Just like lobbying isn’t technically bribery because it’s “official bribery” so it’s got a different name.
I could think of a few dozen on the top of my head, but I imagine it’s one of those things that as the collective "me"s got used to it, we could probably all use an extra hand and it would quickly get into the hundreds
A lot. It would be quite a few just to fully get into the hobbies I have, and quite a lot more to pursue all the things I’d like to learn.
I ran /r/cryptotechnology for years, and am good friends with the /r/cc mods. Reddit is a mess though, especially in the crypto areas.
Fair point, I agree with this. There should probably be another icon in the browser that shows if all, some, or none of the media on a page has signatures that can be validated. Though that gets messy as well, because what is “media”? Things can be displayed in a web canvas or SVG that appears to be a regular image, when in reality it’s rendered on the fly.
Security and cryptography UX is hard. Good point, thanks for bringing that up! Btw, this is kind of my field.
The best way this could be handled is a green check mark near the video that you could click on it and it would give you all the meta data of the video (location, time, source, etc) with a digital signature (what would look like a random string of text) that you could click on and your browser would show you the chain of trust, where the signature came from, that it’s valid, probably the manufacturer of the equipment it was recorded on, etc.
This is the best edit
Lol our dogs are in a similar situation. One dog had a tooth pulled and gets to eat wet food, and the other dog inhales her food and then looks at us like “wtf is this”.
Same, I went from kind of understanding most of the concepts to grokking a lot of it pretty well. He’s super good at explaining things.
Tooth and Claw! I haven’t seen that mentioned. Awesome podcast about animal attacks and animal facts
TLSNotary.org its a way of proving the result of a tls session to someone else. So for example you could prove your bank balance to someone else without giving them your login credentials or you could prove you received a DM from someone.
Good for him, I hope he is ok